New Redemption Grab Bag now includes an assortment of 500 cards from five (5) different expansion sets. Available at Cactus website.
I also take exception to your claim that I'm doing anything here "rather than" the rules of Redemption. My appeal to broader definitions speaks only to conventions that players expect to remain consistent. I will not argue that discarding is "playing" and activating is "discarding" just because we can make rules that would call it that. Convention is a key component in making a game accessible.
That said, I am still defining place and play firmly within the context of these rules and these rules only. I simply think that it's easy enough for everyone to understand and distinguish if "placing" is putting a card somewhere and "playing" is actively using the card in some way, either by activation or by putting it "in play" where it can be the target of most effects.
Let's ALL playce our differences aside for a moment.
redemption1414 (11:36:47 AM): I can't make any fun half words. Well Phooeylambodiablov (11:37:29 AM): playcelambodiablov (11:37:44 AM): imma start using that term nowredemption1414 (11:37:55 AM): Eh, doesn't have the same weird sound I shoot for. But it works.lambodiablov (11:38:02 AM): I COPYRIGHT IT... 25 cents anytime its used
If you PLACE a weapon in territory, it is played, but its special ability does not activate. Since it is placed, it sticks around after that phase.As the weapon enters battle, its special ability activates. But the card was already played in a prior phase. If the weapon was placed, and then later DD was activated, then DD does nothing to the weapon as it enters battle. Why not? Because it is not being "played" at that moment. It was already played when it was placed on a previous turn.
Quote from: STAMP on February 12, 2010, 12:16:53 PMLet's ALL playce our differences aside for a moment.You totally just stole my joke:Quoteredemption1414 (11:36:47 AM): I can't make any fun half words. Well Phooeylambodiablov (11:37:29 AM): playcelambodiablov (11:37:44 AM): imma start using that term nowredemption1414 (11:37:55 AM): Eh, doesn't have the same weird sound I shoot for. But it works.lambodiablov (11:38:02 AM): I COPYRIGHT IT... 25 cents anytime its usedI'll take my $0.25 now. *edit*Quote from: Bryon on February 12, 2010, 12:18:50 PMIf you PLACE a weapon in territory, it is played, but its special ability does not activate. Since it is placed, it sticks around after that phase.As the weapon enters battle, its special ability activates. But the card was already played in a prior phase. If the weapon was placed, and then later DD was activated, then DD does nothing to the weapon as it enters battle. Why not? Because it is not being "played" at that moment. It was already played when it was placed on a previous turn.Wait wait wait wait a second... I've had it ruled that Proud Pharisee cannot play the next enhancement if a character with a weapon on him entered battle first, because the weapon was considered to have been played.
Putting something in the discard pile is always discarding... which is its own ability/action.
Sorry if I wasn't clear, but I never meant my last comment to be directed at you. I was refering to when Bryon was talking about common card terms, such as how a piece of cardstock is referred to as a card.
Yeah, and I totally agree with something like this, where the two can be similar, but there is a line drawn between the two. Some times both can happen together... Tclass enhs for example. First it would be played by game rule, and then its ability activates, which allows it to be placed (provided it has a place ability)
Any time you put a card from hand onto the table (other than discard pile), you are playing it.
If you PLACE a character in territory, it is played, but its special ability does not activate.
If you PLACE a weapon in territory, it is played, but its special ability does not activate...If the weapon was placed, and then later DD was activated, then DD does nothing to the weapon as it enters battle.
If you PLACE an enhancement in Storehouse, it is played, but its special ability does not activate. Since it is placed, it sticks around after that phase.
If you simply PLAY a territory class enhancement (that does not contain a place ability), then it is NOT placed. Its special ability DOES activate. Since it was NOT placed, then it does NOT stick around after that phase.
So, place and play are different, but not mutually exclusive. There is a lot of overlap.
Lastly, to Stamp, the principal reason I've chosen this line of thought is that it makes it incredibly simple to understand and can be very clearly delineated by the rules. Placing a card is just putting it somewhere. Playing a card is putting it "in play" and/or activating it (in many cases, those two happen together anyway).
Recognizing that multiple points of view are valid? On the Internet?! I thought you'd know better.
As I told Lambo, the various ideas coincide about 98% of the time, in terms of whether or not they "work" with the cards. So to find the differentiation and determine what works best, we must look at the reasons why they must be defined one way and not the other, and which makes the most sense among the 2% disagreement between them.
STAMP, that is true. I just prefer to look at it from my perspective. When a card goes from hand to discard pile, that is called discarding, not playing. Discarding a card and playing a card ARE mutually exclusive. Placing a card and playing a card are NOT mutually exclusive.If you place a character or enhancement into your territory, that is playing it.This is true of characters placed from hand into territory, weapons placed from hand onto characters, characters placed from hand onto fortresses, and enhancements placed from hand onto fortresses. In all those cases, the card is going from hand into the field of play.I can understand the head scratching when it comes to "playing" a card to an area that is NOT in play, but there are cards that do that ("Plays to set aide area."). And you still "play" an artifact when you place it face down in your artifact pile. If there were a card that said "Opponent cannot play artifacts, sites, or characters next turn," that would keep your opponent from placing any one of those into his territory - even face down. Right?
Discarding a card and playing a card ARE mutually exclusive. Placing a card and playing a card are NOT mutually exclusive.
This is true of characters placed from hand into territory, weapons placed from hand onto characters, characters placed from hand onto fortresses, and enhancements placed from hand onto fortresses. In all those cases, the card is going from hand into the field of play.
And you still "play" an artifact when you place it face down in your artifact pile.
QuoteDiscarding a card and playing a card ARE mutually exclusive. Placing a card and playing a card are NOT mutually exclusive.But you haven't explained what makes them different.
I do not think putting Characters in your territory is "placing"
*The only case where Placement happens without an ability is Lost Souls and sites.
So, Lambo, "holds" is a "may place" special ability again?
Panic Demon (pale green) places itself on a hero. Panic Demon is not played at that moment, because it was already played.
How can a card activate its ability if it wasn't played at some point?
Otherwise, I go from placing an artifact to activating it, and it was never played?
If putting a card into your territory without its special ability activating (see heroes, weapons, ECs, artifacts, multi-color sites), can still count as playing it, then placing a card from hand onto fortress still counts as playing it, too.
Mark,Any ability that says "search for a card and play it" does not work under Bryon's definition, which I should also note that you have slightly misstated by leaving out the "only from your hand" restriction.
The answer to "Why MUST this be considered PLAY, rather than only a place" comes down to one thing for me: a card can't hit the table from hand without being either played or discarded. How can a card activate its ability if it wasn't played at some point?
I think for Bryon's interpretation to work we have to entertain a previous debate about whether cards that are searched for actually "pass through" the hand. I did not have an opinion on that one way or another, but I do remember reading a thread about it.